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  • Sky Arts
  • 1h 30m
  • United Kingdom
  • Special Interest
Notorious art forger John Myatt teaches students the tricks of the trade. This part looks at David Hockney's iconic Californian pool paintings. This exclusive ten-part Sky Arts series follows notorious art forger John Myatt, the man who was involved in what Scotland Yard called the biggest art fraud of the 20th Century, around the UK as he teaches aspiring artists how to paint in the style of the worlds greatest artists. Myatt's stunning forgeries of Matisse, Chagall and Klee notoriously fooled the art world in the 1990s. After seven successful years of gulling the world's most prominent private collectors and art experts, Myatt was eventually caught and charged with deception in 1998. He served time in Brixton prison but his subsequent fame has enabled him to open a legitimate Genuine Fake business where his replica paintings now sell for thousands of pounds and fine art publishers Washington Green have exhibited his work on a national tour. So high is the level of interest in his life story that Clive Owen is rumoured to play him in a forthcoming British film called what else? Genuine Fake. In this revealing series, Myatt reveals the tricks of the trade and stylistic insights which enabled him to emulate iconic paintings from world-renowned artists. From a Monet landscape to a Modigliani nude, Myatt provides his aspiring students with both the theory and technique to set up their easels and capture the composition of a street scene by Hopper or the brushstrokes of a still life by Cezanne. And he passes on the tricks of the trade too - did you know that rubbing soil onto canvas replicates Braque's finish for example, or that coffee ages a painting by a century or more?

10 episodes

Series Premiere

1x01 Edward Hopper

Series Premiere

1x01 Edward Hopper

  • no air date1h 30m

This episode sees Myatt take his students to Dungeness in Kent - the perfect location to recreate the desolate landscape of one of arts great realists, the American, Edward Hopper.
A Hopper landscape may look simple to copy, but the biggest challenge for the students is to bring a soulless landscape to life by giving it a sense that there is actually something going on. The landscape is an immediate worry for book illustrator Shirley Chaing, whose own paintings are bright and humorous. Will she be able to leave her own style behind to capture the loneliness of a Hopper?
And, once the windswept beach has been left behind, Myatt unveils a drawing of Brixton Prison that he sketched when he was jailed for art forgery - and reveals his rather unorthodox way of getting it home...

1x02 Amadeo Modigliani

  • no air date1h 30m

n this episode, Myatt takes his students to the Sunbeam Studios in West London to emulate an artist who shocked the art world with his erotic take on the nude, Amadeo Modigliani.

John's three students are all talented artists in their own right, although this challenge has thrown one of them completely out of his comfort zone. Jamie Sinclair is an airbrush artist, often spraying directly onto motorbikes, but he is now faced with capturing a Modigliani nude on canvas - with a paintbrush.

It's one thing to paint the model you see in front of you, but it's another to grasp the eroticism of a Modiglinani. The worst case scenario is to end up with an unsexy painting and before long, John is worried that this is where his students are heading...

Back in the studio, John reveals a trade secret from his criminal past; a rather unorthodox way to create an authentic glaze on his forgeries - lubricating jelly...

1x03 Vincent van Gogh

  • no air date1h 30m

This episode sees Myatt taking his class of three to Ingestre Hall in Staffordshire to paint a self portrait in the style of one of the world's greatest and most tortured artists; Vincent Van Gogh.

Painting a self portrait is a challenge for any artist, but the three students have the additional hurdle of painting themselves in the vibrant brushstrokes of Van Gogh. The task is all about expressionism, and John helps the students to find the right balance between passion and control.
This turns out to be easier said than done. His frustration builds up throughout the day, especially with Carl Thompson, an airbrush artist, who is far too controlled with his painting to come anywhere near a Van Gogh. John believes the only way to find some passion in Carl is to show some passion himself. But does his sudden outburst help Carl to put some more soul into his painting?

Back in his studio however, Myatt takes a poignant look back on his time criminal forging and reveals how depressing he found it watching his paintings sell as the genuine article.

1x04 Andre Derain

  • no air date1h 30m

This part sees the team on the banks of the Thames in London to paint in the style of an artist who was so revolutionary he was called a wild beast, Andre Derain.
At first glance, Derain's fauvist style may look straightforward, but it's deceptively simple and it's not until the students begin painting that they can appreciate this. Their challenge is to simplify the landscape in front of them and exaggerate the colours to the unrealistic limits of the colour spectrum.
It proves much trickier than it looks. Ex-graffiti artist Jason Warren is more used to painting with spray cans, not paintbrushes and Alannah Barker, a young art student, lacks the confidence to express herself with colour. In the end it's amateur artist Gail Romanes who surprises everyone.

The usual trip around Myatt's studio reveals some sketches he drew of his cell in Brixton Prison and the reasons behind how he ended up being called Picasso...

1x05 David Hockney

  • no air date1h 30m

This part sees the aspiring artists recreating one of David Hockney's iconic Californian pool paintings. And, as the students soon find out, the straight, flat lines of a Hockney masterpiece require more than just good old painting skills. Much of their day is spent battling with masking tape to achieve perfect edges, and as if that wasn't enough of a challenge, John also substitutes their paintbrushes for rollers. Back in the studio, Myatt expands on one of his magnificent genuine fakes, a painting in the style of Raoul Duffy.

1x06 John Singer Sargent

  • no air date1h 30m

This episode travels to Middleton Hall in Staffordshire to paint an Edwardian socialite in the style of celebrated portrait painter, John Singer Sargent.

To paint a portrait in Sargent's masterful style is a real challenge for even the most skilled artist and the three students are both excited and daunted about giving it a go. Myatt explains how they need to find the flamboyance and gusto for which Sargent was famous, teaching them to lunge at the canvas with their paintbrushes, but they all seem a little unsure...Meanwhile, he reminisces about the time he was released from Brixton Prison. Sure he would never paint again, he was surprised by a call from the man who had arrested him.

1x07 Claude Monet

  • no air date1h 30m

This episode takes in the glories of the English countryside, as Myatt teaches his students the style of an artist who changed the world's perception of art forever: Claude Monet.

This is one artist John has high hope will be reasonably easy for his students to emulate. The students are a talented bunch and one of them, Kevin Cunningham, has been a runner-up for the famous BP Portraiture Award. But can he paint landscapes?

The students are charged with capturing the light using small dabs of unblended colour and attempt Monet's distinct landscape composition. It's a different language of art for all of them, but with a teacher who's painted hundreds of Monets by their sides, surely they can rise to the Impressionist challenge?

Back in the studio, John expands on the Impressionist theme with his version of Monet's Japanese Bridge over Water Lillies, and recalls his amazement that during his forging days, none of the so-called art experts ever picked up on the trade emulsion he used to paint with.

1x08 Auguste Renoir

  • no air date1h 30m

This episode sees Myatt teaching his students how to paint a nude in the style of a French artist renowned for his portrayal of the sensual female form: Auguste Renoir.

The biggest challenge the students face is capturing the pearlescent quality of young female flesh seen in Renoir's nudes - but John has an old trick up his sleeve to help them on their way - lubricating jelly... However, one of the students, Andre McQueen, has an even bigger, unforeseen battle on his hands: a phobia of nudes...

1x09 Paul Cezanne

  • no air date1h 30m

This penultimate episode takes to the hills as Myatt teaches his students how to paint landscapes in the style of an artist who brought about a revolution that opened the door to modern art: Paul Cezanne.

Here he finds that he has a tough challenge on his hands. He teaches an art student who only works in black and white, an artist who's more used to working with ceramics, and a tattoo artist who usually works on skin how to take the landscape they see in front of them and translate it into the almost abstract style of Cezanne. And he also lets them in on a trade secret from his criminal past: one of the more unusual ways to age his paintings by up to a hundred years was the application of cold coffee...

1x10 George Braque

  • no air date1h 30m

This episode sees Myatt take his students on to a rooftop overlooking London's Southbank, where they get to grips with painting in the style of one of modern art's great revolutionaries, George Braque.

It's a tough day for John. His first task is to take the fear out of painting a cubist landscape and give the three students the confidence to think and paint outside the box. He teaches them how to paint using cubist language, but the students are completely daunted. Amateur artist Edna Eckett is thrown by the limited palette and feels lost without any primary colours. Actor Rick Warden is a big bag of nerves and Cassie McDaniel is a portrait artist who steers clear of landscapes.

With John's guidance, can these three translate an urban landscape into a cubist masterpiece that even Braque would be proud of? And back in the studio, John shows goes over one of his cubist paintings, a Picasso. Would you be able to tell it's a fake?

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